EU maps out joint 2017 legislative priorities

(BRUSSELS) - The three EU institutions, European Council, Commission and Parliament, have negotiated a joint declaration on their 2017 priorities for the first time, focusing on jobs, security and the digital market.

The joint declaration, signed by Slovak prime minister Robert Fico for the EU presidency, Parliament chief Schulz and Commission president Juncker, will help the three EU institutions to pool their efforts and to ensure substantial progress in fields where they are most needed. It is also is the first time that the EU establishes a set of common legislative priorities for the following year.

In 2017, the EU will give priority treatment to legislative initiatives in the following policy areas:

giving a new boost to jobs, growth and investment through strengthening the European fund for strategic investment, modernising trade defence instruments, improving waste management in a circular economy, making progress on the banking union and on the capital markets union

addressing the social dimension of the EU, in particular through enhancing the youth employment initiative, improving social security coordination, allowing easier access of accessible products and services to the market and creating a European solidarity corps

reforming the EU's migration policy in a spirit of responsibility and solidarity, notably through revising the EU's asylum rules and enhancing investments in third countries to address the root causes of migration

delivering on a digital single market, in particular through reforming the EU telecoms and copyright rules, allowing the use of the 700 MHz band for mobile services, preventing unjustified geo-blocking, revising the audiovisual media services directive and modernising the common data protection rules

building an energy union and a forward looking climate change policy, notably through the implementation of the 2030 climate and energy framework, the follow-up to the Paris agreement and the clean energy for all Europeans package

The Council, Parliament and Commission agreed that progress is also needed in pursuing their commitment to common European values, in the fight against tax fraud, in the preservation of the principle of free movement and in the reinforcement of Europe's contribution to stability, security and peace.